Saturday, July 2, 2022

Cambria Heights houses make history

 

Queens Post

Two residential areas in southeast Queens were designated historic districts yesterday by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission.

The commission created two separate historic districts—the Cambria Heights-222nd Street district and the Cambria Heights-227th district. Both areas, which consist of Tudor-style houses, have traditionally been occupied by the African American and Afro-Caribbean communities.

The districts contain row houses built in 1931 that are remarkably intact along two blocks, according to the commission. The Cambria Heights – 222nd Street Historic District contains 46 row houses between 115th Road and 116th Avenue and the Cambria Heights – 227th Street Historic District, which is five blocks away, contains 50 houses between 116th Avenue and Linden Boulevard.

“The designation of these two historic districts, the first in Cambria Heights, was a priority for me and fits within LPC’s equity framework, as we seek to increase designations in communities not well represented by landmarks, and to better tell the story of all New Yorkers,” said Landmarks Preservation Commission Chair Sarah Carroll.

The 222nd and 227th Street Historic Districts, according to the commission, consist of two cohesive and intact groups of Storybook-style row houses incorporating Tudor-style elements.

The Storybook style is primarily associated with California, where it flourished as a small-house style in the 1920s—influenced by fantasy architecture and movie backdrops. Storybook features of the 227th Street houses include half timbering, diamond-pane windows and stucco with brick and stone accents, as well as whimsical red, blue, and green slate shingles.

The 222nd Street houses feature Tudor-arched window openings, brightly colored terra-cotta roofs and windows, brick facades with random stone accents, and whimsically decorated chimneys with patterned brick and stucco panels. The design of the row houses gives the street a “stage-set” quality consistent with the Storybook style, of a Hollywood backdrop or fairytale illustration come to life.

Initially, residents of both 222nd and 227th Streets consisted of mainly white middle-class families. Black families began moving to Cambria Heights by the 1950s and the makeup of the community began to change.

By the 1980s, immigrant families from Caribbean countries such as Jamaica, Haiti, Trinidad and Tobago, Guyana, and Barbados moved to the area. Today, Cambria Heights remains one of several prosperous predominantly Black residential communities in Southeastern Queens.

“These homes are significant not only because of their appearance but also because of what they represent to the communities…that the American Dream was within reach,” said Mayor Eric Adams.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good News !

NPC_translator said...

Blacks didn't build that. But I'm glad they're landmarking them, even if it's for baloney BLM reasons.

Anonymous said...

How should the Sheeple react to this? Should we be angry at this affront to capitalism? Should we be overjoyed at this preservation of old houses?
What would Lumpy Hannity think?

georgetheatheist said...

Meh.

Anonymous said...

Maybe Broadway-Flushing will finally be landmarked by NYC once more African Americans move here, too.

Anonymous said...

@"Blacks didn't build that."

How do you know? Were you there when they were building them? Did you do a headcount every morning when the construction workers started?
The only baloney around here is the stuff you and your clones spew all the time.

Anonymous said...

@What would Lumpy Hannity think?

More importantly what do your rich sponsors think about your performance as an activist.

Anonymous said...

This is all Biden’s fault!

Anonymous said...

I wouldn't live in Cambria Heights, much less anywhere else in QUEENS County (The TURD World!), even if I was given the Key to the City and free land and tax free for life! The City Hall cesspool is about to overflow!